Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve
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Department for Environment and Heritage Management Plan Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve 2007 www.environment.sa.gov.au This plan of management was adopted on 18 May 2007 and was prepared pursuant to section 38 of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972. Published by the Department for Environment and Heritage, Adelaide, Australia © Department for Environment and Heritage, 2007 ISBN: 1 921238 99 2 Cover photography: Bucks Lake wetland (Courtesy of Ben Taylor) This document may be cited as ‘Department for Environment and Heritage (2007) Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve Management Plan, Adelaide, South Australia’ FOREWORD Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve are located on the Lower South East coast, approximately 40 kilometres south-west of Mount Gambier. The reserves conserve unique coastal habitat in the Lower South East and protect important flora and fauna species, including some of national and international significance. Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park protects 30.5 hectares of coastal habitat, which was purchased with the assistance of the Australian Government’s Natural Heritage Trust. The park protects part of the only known population of Carpenter Rocks Manna Gum and provides significant roosting habitat for the Orange-bellied Parrot, which is critically endangered at a national level. Bucks Lake Game Reserve is 138 hectares of near pristine seasonally-inundated coastal wetland. The reserve protects habitat for important fauna species such as the state endangered Swamp Antechinus and the Southern Bush Rat. The land comprising the reserves is significant for the Boandik people, with one site of significance located in Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and another two sites within close proximity of the reserves. The draft plan for Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve was released for public exhibition in August 2006. At the close of the comment period, 13 submissions were received, raising issues including the possible addition of unallotted Crown land to the north-west of Bucks Lake Game Reserve, the Bucks Lake Rehabilitation Project and additional information regarding native vegetation and fauna in both reserves. All comments were considered by the South East Consultative Committee and forwarded to the South Australian National Parks and Wildlife Council for advice before the plan was adopted. This management plan outlines objectives and strategies for the future management of these reserves, notably the protection of threatened species, support of the Bucks Lake Rehabilitation Project, and the intention to enter into cooperative environmental management agreements with environmentally-conscious landowners near the reserves. Many people have contributed to the development of this plan of management. Their interest and helpful suggestions are gratefully acknowledged. I now formally adopt the plan of management for Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve under the provisions of section 38 of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972. I encourage you to read the plan and appreciate the importance of the habitat protected by these reserves. HON GAIL GAGO MLC MINISTER FOR ENVIRONMENT AND CONSERVATION Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve Management Plan 2007 i TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD......................................................................................................................................................... i 1 PARK LOCATIONS AND FEATURES .......................................................................................................... 1 2 LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK ....................................................................................................................... 3 2.1 National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972.......................................................................................... 3 2.2 Native Title Act 1993 ..................................................................................................................... 3 3 VISION ........................................................................................................................................................ 4 3.1 Key Values ...................................................................................................................................... 4 3.2 Key Pressures .................................................................................................................................. 4 4 MANAGING NATURAL HERITAGE............................................................................................................ 5 4.1 Geology, Soils and Landform ...................................................................................................... 5 4.2 Hydrology ....................................................................................................................................... 6 4.3 Native Vegetation ........................................................................................................................ 8 4.4 Native Fauna ............................................................................................................................... 11 4.5 Introduced Plants ........................................................................................................................ 14 4.6 Introduced Animals..................................................................................................................... 15 5 MANAGING FIRE ..................................................................................................................................... 17 6 MANAGING CULTURAL HERITAGE ........................................................................................................ 19 7 MANAGING TOURISM AND RECREATION............................................................................................ 20 7.1 Visitor Use and Access................................................................................................................ 20 8 MANAGING RESOURCE USE.................................................................................................................. 21 8.1 Exploration and Mining .............................................................................................................. 21 8.2 Duck Hunting ............................................................................................................................... 22 9 INVOLVING THE COMMUNITY ............................................................................................................... 23 10 MANAGING RESERVE TENURE ............................................................................................................... 25 10.1 Public Utilities................................................................................................................................ 25 SUMMARY OF MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES .................................................................................................. 27 REFERENCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY................................................................................................................. 31 APPENDIX A: CONSERVATION STATUS CODES ............................................................................................ 33 APPENDIX B: THE JAMBA/CAMBA INTERNATIONAL TREATIES .................................................................... 35 APPENDIX C: PROCLAMATION FOR CARPENTER ROCKS CONSERVATION PARK .................................. 36 LIST OF FIGURES Figure 1: Location .....................................................................................................................................2 Figure 2: Features ......................................................................................................................................7 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The advice and input received from the Kungari Heritage Association Inc, the Field Naturalists’ Society of South Australia, the Friends of Mount Gambier Parks and the South Australian Field and Game Association is greatly appreciated. Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park and Bucks Lake Game Reserve Management Plan 2007 iii 1 PARK LOCATIONS AND FEATURES Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park was proclaimed on 6 September 2001 under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972 with a section 43 proclamation providing for existing and future rights for exploration and mining under the Petroleum Act 2000. The South Australian Government purchased the land with the assistance of the Australian Government through the National Reserve System Program of the Natural Heritage Trust and a contribution from the Nature Foundation SA Inc. Bucks Lake Game Reserve was constituted as a National Park in 1968 under the National Parks Act 1966 and was later constituted as a Game Reserve by statute under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972. Bucks Lake Game Reserve and Carpenter Rocks Conservation Park are located on the Lower South East coast of South Australia, approximately 40 km south-west of Mount Gambier by road, close to the township of Carpenter Rocks (Figure 1). Both reserves experience the cool wet winters and long mild dry summers that are characteristic of the South East region. Major land uses in the area include forestry, grazing, cropping, and rural living. Other National Parks and Wildlife Act reserves in the vicinity of the reserves include Nene Valley Conservation Park and Canunda